Consumers have little patience with brands that either do not personalize their marketing or do it badly, judging by "The value of getting personalization right — or wrong — is
multiplying," a report by McKinsey.
Of the consumers polled, 71% expect personalization, and 76% get frustrated when it’s not there.
Moreover, loyalty is up
for grabs, with 75% of consumers having exhibited new shopping behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This wrap-up of McKinsey research shows that consumers want brands to show they know
them on a personal level. That is done through actions like these, most of which can be accomplished in email:
- Make it easy for me to navigate in-store and online —
75%
- Give me relevant product/service recommendations — 67%
- Tailor messaging to my needs — 66%
- Offer
me targeted promotions — 65%
- Celebrate my milestones — 60%
- Send me timely communications tied to key moments — 59%
- Follow up with my post purchase — 58%
- Personally address communications to me — 54%
- Send triggers based on my behavior —
53%
- Engage and onboard me when I buy for the first time — 51%
- Show up in my frequently visited websites/apps — 40%
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These types of personalization can influence buying behavior throughout the entire customer life cycle, the report continues.
For instance, 78% of consumers are more likely to refer
brands that personalize to friends and family. And 76% are more likely to consider purchasing and 78% to repurchase.
Who’s good at it? Digitally native brands.
These firms own customer transactions and product development and use first-party data in their decision-making.
In contrast, brick-and-mortar retailers (of groceries and apparel, say)
tend to own customer transactions but not product development. And first-party data is captured but mixed.
Finally, brands without direct relationships with consumers (e.g., CPGs)
typically do not own customer transactions, and have limited access to first-party data.
As if it needs to be argued, McKinsey notes that personalization drives performance and better
customer outcomes. Fast-growing firms derive “40% more of their revenue from personalization than their slower-growing counterpoints,” the authors write.
The authors are:
- Nidhi Arora, a consultant in McKinsey’s San Francisco office,
- Wei Wei Liu, an associate partner.
- Kelsey Robinson and Eli Stein,
partners.
- Daniel Ensslen, a consultant in the Boston office.
- Lars Fiedler, a partner in the Hamburg
office.
- Gustavo Schüler, a partner in the Southern California office.